Henry Pelham

The Right Honourable
Henry Pelham
FRS MP
Pelham by John Shackleton
Prime Minister of Great Britain
In office
27 August 1743  6 March 1754
Monarch George II
Preceded by The Earl of Wilmington
Succeeded by The Duke of Newcastle
Chancellor of the Exchequer
In office
12 December 1743  6 March 1754
Monarch George II
Preceded by Samuel Sandys
Succeeded by William Lee
Personal details
Born (1694-09-25)25 September 1694
Laughton, Sussex, England
Died 6 March 1754(1754-03-06) (aged 59)
St James's, Middlesex, England
Resting place All Saints' Church, Laughton, East Sussex
Political party Whig
Spouse(s)
Children 4
Parents Thomas Pelham, 1st Baron Pelham
Lady Grace Holles
Alma mater Hart Hall, Oxford[1]

Henry Pelham FRS (25 September 1694 6 March 1754) was a British Whig statesman, who served as Prime Minister of Great Britain from 27 August 1743 until his death. He was the younger brother of Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle, who served in Pelham's government and succeeded him as Prime Minister. Pelham is generally considered to have been Britain's third Prime Minister after Sir Robert Walpole and the Earl of Wilmington.

Pelham's premiership was relatively uneventful in terms of domestic affairs, although it was during his premiership that Great Britain experienced the tumult of the 1745 Jacobite uprising. In foreign affairs, Great Britain fought in several wars. Upon Pelham's death, his brother Newcastle took full control of the ministry.

Early life

Pelham, Newcastle's younger brother, was a younger son of the Thomas Pelham, 1st Baron Pelham and his wife, the former Grace Pelham, Baroness Pelham of Laughton, the daughter of Gilbert Holles, 3rd Earl of Clare and Grace Pierrepont. He was educated at Westminster School and Hart Hall, Oxford.[2] Hertford College, Oxford, the present-day incarnation of Hart Hall, still honours him in the title of its drinking club, the Sir Henry Pelham Gentlemen's Sporting Society. As a volunteer he served in Dormer's regiment at the Battle of Preston in 1715 and spent some time on the Continent. He was returned as Member of Parliament for Seaford in Sussex by his brother, the Duke of Newcastle, at a by-election on 28 February 1717 and represented it until 1722.[3]

Pelham, c. 1720

Career

Government

Through strong family influence, and the recommendation of Robert Walpole, he was chosen in 1721 as Lord of the Treasury. At the 1722 general election he was returned as MP for Sussex county.[3] In 1724 he entered the ministry as Secretary at War, but this office he exchanged in 1730 for the more lucrative one of Paymaster of the Forces. He made himself conspicuous by his support of Walpole on the question of the excise. He, Newcastle, and the Prime Minister would often meet at Houghton Hall in Norfolk, where they would draw up much of the country's policy. These meetings became known as the Norfolk Congress. With Walpole, he served as a founding governor of the popular charity the Foundling Hospital when it opened its doors in 1739.

In 1742 a union of parties resulted in the formation of an administration in which Pelham became Prime Minister the following year, succeeding the Earl of Wilmington after his death.

Prime minister

The first year of Pelham's premiership is regarded as a continuation of the Carteret ministry, with Lord Carteret continuing as Secretary of State for the Northern Department with responsibility for foreign affairs; Carteret was close to King George II. Pelham served as First Lord of the Treasury, Chancellor of the Exchequer and Leader of the House of Commons.

In November 1744, the Pelhams forced Lord Carteret out of the ministry: Pelham bluntly told the king that either Carteret step down, or the Pelhamites would, leaving His Majesty without a government. Thereafter Pelham shared power with his brother, the Duke of Newcastle upon Tyne. Pelham was regarded as the leading figure, but rank and influence made his brother very powerful in the Cabinet. In spite of a genuine attachment, there were occasional disputes between them, which sometimes led to further difficulties.

The Broad Bottomed Administration

Being strongly in favour of peace, Pelham carried on the War of the Austrian Succession with languor and indifferent success, but the country, wearied of the interminable struggle, was disposed to acquiesce in his foreign policy almost without a murmur. King George II, thwarted in his own favourite schemes, made overtures in February 1746 to Lord Bath, but his purpose was upset by the resignation of the two Pelhams (Henry and Newcastle), who, after a two-day hiatus in which Bath and Carteret (now earl Granville) proved unable to form a ministry, resumed office at the king's request. One of their terms was to insist that the king should have 'total confidence' in a ministry; rather than partial grudging acceptance of the Whigs.

Pelham

The Augustan era was essential to the development of prime ministerial power as being entirely dependant on a Commons majority, rather than royal prerogative interventions. While the king struggled with his headstrong son, Frederick, Prince of Wales, his son's uncertain constitutional position was high in the Leicester House party set. In 1748 Frederick, a Tory, planned to bring down the Pelhamites at a general election due the following year. The Prime Minister called an early poll in 1748 by asking the king to dissolve parliament in 1747. The prince and his father, the king grew to hate one another with unspeakable animosity. But one consequence was a closer relationship between Henry Pelham and the Sovereign. When he finally died in 1754, the King remarked "Now I shall have no more peace." The Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle had been signed in 1748 leading inexorably to a number of cost-cutting budgetary measures.

The Army and Navy spending shrunk from £12 m to £7 million per annum. Pelham promised to reduce interest rates through introduction of a balancing act measure from 4% to 3% by 1757. He also assisted a fund to reduce the National Debt. In 1749, the Consolidation Act was passed, reorganising the Royal Navy. On 20 March 1751, the British calendar was reorganised as well (New Year's Day became 1 January); Britain would adopt the Gregorian calendar one year later. In 1752 he was able to reduce the land tax from 4 s. to 2 s in the pound (an effective reduction from 20% to 10%).

One social consequence of the press gangs going to sea in an expansive navy fleet was to the growth of industrial processes necessary for warfare. In the ports the distillation of gin demonstrated clearly by engravers such as Hogarth in "Gin Lane" the depravity issuing forth from the demon drink. Preachers "fire and brimsone" in favour of temperance, and drunken soldiers and sailors persuaded the administration to introduce the Gin Acts. The 1751 act was the last of four that had largely failed to prevent serious social unrest, including riots in London, reduced the number licensed dealers and sellers of liquor. By restricting supply the consumption dropped and price fell helping to manage the problem.[4]

Two of Pelham's final acts were the Jew Bill of 1753, which allowed Jews to become naturalized by application to Parliament, and the Marriage Act of 1753, which enumerated the minimum age of consent for marriage. Upon his death, his brother (the aforementioned Duke of Newcastle upon Tyne) took over government.

Achievements

His very defects were among the chief elements of Pelham's success, for one with a strong personality, moderate amount self-respect, or haughty conceptions of statesmanship could not have restrained the discordant elements of the cabinet for any length of time the way he did. Moreover, he possessed tact and a thorough acquaintance with the forms of the House of Commons. Whatever quarrels or insubordination might have existed within the cabinet, they never broke out into open revolt. His foreign policy followed Walpole's model of emphasizing peace and ending wars. His financial policy Was a major success once peace had been signed in 1748 to end the War of the Austrian Succession.[5] He demobilized the armed forces, and reduced government spending from £12 million to £7 million. He refinanced the national debt dropping the interest from 4% to 3%. In 1752 he reduced the land tax from four shillings to two shillings in the pound that is from 20% to 10%.[6][7] According to historians Stephen Brumwell and W.A. Speck, his:

subdued manner concealed a shrewd and calculating politician. He was reserved and cautious, but behind the reserve was steel. All agreed on his integrity, which was remarkable and a venal age; unlike Walpole, he died relatively poor."[8]

Personal life

Pelham had married Lady Catherine Manners, daughter of the John Manners, 2nd Duke of Rutland, in 1726. They had four daughters:

When Pelham was elevated to Prime Minister, he began construction of a house located at 22 Arlington Street in St. James's, a district of the City of Westminster in central London. He hired the architect William Kent to build the structure in two phases.[9] Kent died in 1748[10] and the work was completed by Stephen Wright[11] in 1754.[9]

Pelham was buried in All Saints' Church, Laughton, East Sussex.[12]

Pelham's personal papers were inherited by his son-in-law and now form part of the Newcastle (Clumber) Collection held at the department of Manuscripts and Special Collections, The University of Nottingham. Pelham was the first British Prime Minister who never acceded to the peerage in his lifetime.

Titles from birth to death

  • Mr. Henry Pelham (1694–1706)
  • The Hon. Henry Pelham (1706–1717)
  • The Hon. Henry Pelham, MP (1717–1725)
  • The Rt. Hon. Henry Pelham, MP (1725–1746)
  • The Rt. Hon. Henry Pelham, FRS, MP (1746–1754)

Pelham was played by Roger Allam in the film Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides.

Notes

  1. Famous Oxonians: British Prime Ministers
  2. Foster, Joseph. "'Peach-Peyton', in Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, ed. Joseph Foster (Oxford, 1891), pp. 1131-1154". British History Online. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
  3. 1 2 "PELHAM, Hon. Henry (1695-1754), of Esher Place, Surr". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
  4. Brumwell, p.159
  5. Basil Williams, Whig Supremacy: 1714-1760 (1962) pp 259-70.
  6. Stephen Brumwell and W.A. Speck, Cassell's Companion to Eighteenth Century Britain (2002) p 288.
  7. Dorothy Marshall, Eighteenth Century England (1974) pp 221-27.
  8. Brumwell and Speck, Cassell's Companion to Eighteenth Century Britain (2002) p 288.
  9. 1 2 "About this project". Architecture. London, England: The Royal Institute of British Architects. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  10. "William Kent". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. England: Oxford University Press. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  11. Historic England. "Location Wimbourne House, 22, Arlington Street SW1 (1066498)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  12. PelODNB.

References

  • Ballantyne, Archibald. Lord Carteret: A Political Biography 1690 to 1763 (1887) online
  • Coxe, William, Memoirs of the administration of the Right Honourable Henry Pelham, collected from the family papers, and other authentic documents (2 vol. 1829) online
  • Leonard, Dick. "Henry Pelham—Pragmatic Heir to Walpole." in Dick Leonard, ed. Eighteenth-Century British Premiers (Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011) pp. 40–53.
  • Marshall, Dorothy. Eighteenth Century England (2nd ed. 1974) political history 1714-1784,
  • Wilkes, John (1964). A Whig in Power: The Political Career of Henry Pelham. London.
  • Williams, Basil. The Whig Supremacy: 1714-1760 (2nd ed. 1962).
  • Some material has been adapted from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica.
  • Kulisheck, A. J. "Pelham, Henry". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/21789. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.); cited as PelODNB.
  • More about Henry Pelham on the Downing Street website.
  • Biography of Henry Pelham, with links to online catalogues, on the website of Manuscripts and Special Collections, The University of Nottingham
  •  "Pelham, Henry (1695?-1754)". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
Political offices
Preceded by
The Earl of Radnor
Treasurer of the Chamber
1720–1722
Succeeded by
Charles Stanhope
Preceded by
Thomas Trevor
Secretary at War
1724–1730
Succeeded by
Sir William Strickland
Preceded by
The Lord Wilmington
Paymaster of the Forces
1730–1743
Succeeded by
Thomas Winnington
Preceded by
The Earl of Wilmington
Prime Minister of Great Britain
27 August 1743 – 6 March 1754
Succeeded by
The Duke of Newcastle
First Lord of the Treasury
1743–1754
Preceded by
Samuel Sandys
Chancellor of the Exchequer
1743–1754
Succeeded by
William Lee
Leader of the House of Commons
1743–1754
Succeeded by
Thomas Robinson
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by
George Naylor
William Ashburnham
Member of Parliament for Seaford
1717–1722
Served alongside: George Naylor
Succeeded by
Sir William Gage, Bt
Sir Philip Yorke
Preceded by
Spencer Compton
James Butler
Member of Parliament for Sussex
1722–1754
With: Spencer Compton 1722–1728
James Butler 1728–1741
Earl of Middlesex 1742–1747
John Butler 1747–1754
Succeeded by
John Butler
Thomas Pelham
Records
Preceded by
Sir Robert Walpole
Oldest living Prime Minister of Great Britain
1745–1754
Succeeded by
The Duke of Newcastle

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.